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Watch: Touching Video Shows a Dad Commentating as His Son Wins a World Title
As Jake Wightman pulled off a shocking victory to become the 1500m men’s world champion in Oregon, his dad Geoff was calling the race over the loudspeakers. Jake looked as surprised as anyone as he brought it home, his mouth gaping in awe. Geoff is a former top marathon runner and a veteran athletics commentator, and has been calling races for his son since he was a kid.

Score (97)
Unlikely Duo Celebrates 10th Thanksgiving After Mistaken Text, Shares Favorite Recipe
What started with a wrong number has now turned into a decade-long Thanksgiving tradition — and a heartfelt reminder of how unexpected connections can grow into something lasting. In 2016, Arizona grandmother Wanda Dench was texting out Thanksgiving dinner plans to her six grandchildren when she accidentally sent a message to Jamal Hinton, then a 16-year-old stranger sitting in class. Hinton realized the mix-up but jokingly replied, “Can I still get a plate?” Dench’s response? “Of course you can. That’s what grandmas do…feed everyone!” And she meant it. That year, Hinton joined her for Thanksgiving dinner — and he’s been showing up ever since. “It’s not really a friendship. We’re more a family now,” Hinton told CNN. “It means the world. We talk about anything. We go through everything together.” Over the past ten years, their bond has only deepened. When Dench’s husband Lonnie passed away from COVID-19 in 2020, Hinton was by her side. This year, despite Dench undergoing chemotherapy for breast cancer, the tradition continued — just virtually. Hinton FaceTimed her so they could still share a meal, even from afar. “I was looking so forward to meeting his family and having turkey with everybody,” Dench said. “But we have to accept things the way they are, and I’m sure next year is going to be so much better.” To mark their 10th Thanksgiving together, Dench and Hinton partnered with Green Giant to share one of their favorite holiday dishes: a green bean casserole recipe that’s been part of countless American tables for generations. “Wanda and I are thrilled to celebrate our 10th Thanksgiving together, and partnering with Green Giant makes it even more special,” Hinton said in a press release. “We’re excited to make new memories with their vegetables at our table.” “I can’t believe it’s been 10 years since that mistaken text,” Dench added. “For us, the holidays are all about connections and making memories. Sharing our 10th year – alongside Green Giant’s 100th anniversary – makes this year feel especially meaningful.” Want to try their “Best Ever Green Bean Casserole”? Serves: 6 Prep time: 10 minutes Cook time: 21 minutes Ingredients: 2 tablespoons unsalted butter 8 ounces sliced cremini mushrooms 2 garlic cloves, minced 4 ounces cream cheese, cubed ½ cup whole milk ½ cup chicken broth ½ teaspoon dried thyme ½ teaspoon salt ¼ teaspoon pepper 2 cans (15 oz each) Green Giant Cut Green Beans, drained 1 cup crispy French-fried onions Instructions: Preheat oven to 375°F. In a large pan, heat butter over medium. Add mushrooms and sauté for 5 minutes. Add garlic and cook 1 more minute. Stir in cream cheese, milk, chicken broth, thyme, salt, and pepper. Cook, stirring constantly, until the cream cheese melts and the sauce is bubbling (about 3 minutes). Turn off heat. Stir in green beans until coated. Pour into a 2-quart casserole dish. Top with fried onions. Bake for 10–12 minutes until onions are golden brown. It’s a classic dish with a story that’s anything but ordinary — just like the friendship behind it.

Score (96)
World's First Snowy 'Hamster Wheel' For Skiers Unveiled In Endless Mountain Adventure
A high-tech twist on alpine adventure is on the horizon — and it looks a lot like a giant snow-filled hamster wheel. A startup based in Australia has unveiled plans for the world’s first Snowtunnel Park, a massive rotating tunnel lined with real powder snow and designed to bring year-round skiing and snowboarding to urban centers. Standing 12.5 meters tall — about the height of a four-storey building — the Snowtunnel spins continuously, offering riders an “endless mountain” of fresh snow to carve. At 16 meters wide, it mimics the width of a typical ski run, with over 600 square meters of constantly rideable surface area. “Our mission is to unlock the magic of snow and ignite a passion for alpine experiences for everyone, all year round,” said Scott Kessler, CEO and co-founder of Snowtunnel Parks. Made with real snow produced from just water and air, the Snowtunnel promises to deliver a consistent and safe riding experience in any season. The surface speed can be adjusted to accommodate everyone from first-timers to seasoned skiers. The first full-scale park is set to open in Australia in 2027, with additional sites planned in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, and eventually capital cities around the globe. The team behind the project — Kessler, managing director Chris Northwood, and COO Dan Portelli — say they drew inspiration from their own experience growing up with unpredictable snow seasons in Australia. “We still get excited seeing the first snowflakes on the ground,” Northwood and Portelli said. “But we want everyone to experience that thrill of alpine adventure by bringing the snow to city-based adventure-seekers.” Each Snowtunnel venue will include over 3,000 square meters of snow play, learning, and riding zones, covered in more than 900 cubic meters of snow. The company says the total construction cost per venue will range between £10.4 million and £13 million — less than half the cost of most surf parks and significantly cheaper than large indoor snow slope developments. Snowtunnel has already built and tested a 10-meter proof-of-concept tunnel, with successful early investment rounds under its belt. The company is now launching an open capital round to fund its first commercial site. “What wave parks did for surfing, Snowtunnel will do for snow sports,” Kessler said. “From indoor climbing to skydiving to golf simulators, adventure sports are evolving fast. This is the next frontier.”

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Movember Kicks Off, Urges Action for Men's Health Awareness
Every November, moustaches sprout up across Canada — but it’s not just about facial hair. Movember, now in its 19th year, has grown into a global movement focused on improving men’s health. What began as a campaign to raise money for prostate cancer research has evolved into a much broader effort, tackling everything from mental health to suicide prevention to the rising impact of opioid overdoses. “When we think about men’s health today, in 2025, there are a lot of big questions,” said Catherine Corriveau, director of policy and advocacy at Movember Canada, during an interview on CTV Your Morning Ottawa. “I think one of them is what it means to be a man, which has changed a lot since we started as an organization almost two decades ago.” Corriveau said men’s health doesn’t exist in a vacuum — it affects families, workplaces, and communities. And it comes with a real cost. “Too many men are dying too young in Canada, largely of preventable causes,” she said. “In 2023, that was 75,000 men who died prematurely, before the age of 75.” A report released by Movember Canada in June laid out the scale of the problem. It found men in Canada are: 12% more likely than women to die prematurely from cancer 135% more likely to die from coronary heart disease 153% more likely to die from accidents Three times more likely to die by suicide “The level at which men are dying… two out of five won’t make it to 75, which is a jarring number,” Corriveau said. “Suicide is a huge problem for men. It’s the second-leading cause of death of men ages 15 to 44. It’s also really expensive. It costs Canadian taxpayers $12.4 billion in one year.” That’s part of why Movember is calling for systemic change — not just in medical treatment, but in how society talks about masculinity, vulnerability, and health care access. Still, the moustache remains central to the campaign’s identity. “Growing your mo’ is still the best way to get involved,” Corriveau said. “You can grow your moustache, you can move your body, you can donate, you can host a ‘Mo-ment.’ You can start today. We all have a brother, a cousin, a loved one, a father. This is for everyone.” This year, participants are encouraged to run or walk 60 kilometres during the month of November — one kilometre for every man lost to suicide around the world every hour. And if growing a moustache isn’t your thing, hosting a “Mo-ment” is another option: gathering friends, raising awareness, and helping men feel less alone.

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A Breakthrough Map Just Revealed How The Brain Really Works
The brain’s wiring may hold the key to understanding how it works — and new research shows just how deep that link goes. In a study published in Network Neuroscience, researchers at The Ohio State University found that the complex web of connections between brain regions can reliably predict what each area does. Their findings provide some of the strongest evidence yet that brain connectivity is not just associated with function — it’s a core principle behind how the brain is organized. “We found evidence suggesting that connectivity is a fundamental organizational principle governing brain function,” said lead author Kelly Hiersche, a doctoral student in psychology. “This has implications for understanding what happens when things go wrong in the brain.” The team analyzed data from the Human Connectome Project, which includes MRI scans from over 1,000 participants. These scans map how different regions of the brain communicate — essentially, its wiring diagram. They then used an online tool called NeuroQuery, which pulls from thousands of neuroscience studies to map brain activity patterns across 33 mental functions, including speech, memory, decision making, and face recognition. By combining these maps with the MRI data, the researchers created models showing how connectivity patterns are linked to specific cognitive functions. “Just like how everyone's fingerprint is unique, we find that different brain regions have uniquely identifying connectivity fingerprints based on what mental function they perform,” said Zeynep Saygin, co-author and associate professor of psychology. In other words, by examining how a particular region is connected to the rest of the brain, researchers could predict what that area does — whether it helps you remember something, recognize a face, or make a choice. “It supports a broadly held hypothesis among neuroscientists, that brain connectivity determines brain function,” said senior author David Osher. “But this has not been explicitly shown until now, and not across such a large breadth of cognitive domains.” The relationship held true across the brain, but was especially strong in regions tied to complex mental tasks like executive function and memory — areas that take longer to develop and mature than sensory or motor regions. “These higher-level skills take many years to develop in people,” Hiersche said. “It may be that as you continually use these regions of the brain for them to develop, it results in this very tight link between connectivity and function.” The study not only strengthens the case that function follows wiring, but also provides a new reference point for brain research. The team’s models now serve as a baseline for how healthy young adult brains typically operate. Future research can use these benchmarks to identify what’s different in brains affected by neurological or psychiatric disorders. “Knowing that connectivity is a general organizational principle of brain function across the entire brain provides a foundation for future work in this area,” Hiersche said.

Score (97)
Maya Monument Reveals Ancient Cosmological Design Without Social Hierarchy
A massive ancient structure in southern Mexico is rewriting what we thought we knew about early Maya civilization — and about how monumental projects can get done. Archaeologists have revealed that Aguada Fénix, a 3,000-year-old site first discovered in 2020, is not only far larger than originally believed, but was built as a cosmogram — a map of the universe carved into the Earth. What’s more, it was constructed without signs of kings, elite residences, or forced labor. “It was not like that,” said Takeshi Inomata, the University of Arizona archaeologist who led the study. “We don't need really big social inequality to achieve important things.” The findings, published in Science Advances, are based on new LIDAR scans and fieldwork that show Aguada Fénix to be a sprawling ceremonial complex laid out in the shape of a nested cross. Its central hub, built on an artificial plateau, features two cross-shaped pits that mirror the larger layout. From this center, long ceremonial corridors stretch as far as 9 kilometers, with paired causeways leading the way — likely paths for ritual processions. The team estimates it took 10.8 million person-days to build the Main Plateau, and another 255,000 person-days to construct a canal and dam system that was never completed. But perhaps most remarkable is what the site lacks: there’s no evidence of palaces, royal tombs, or sculptures of rulers. No signs of coercive labor. And yet, the project was massive. “Along with the appeals of collective ceremonies, feasting, and the exchange of goods, the construction of a cosmogram, materializing the order of the Universe, likely provided a rationale for a large number of people to participate without coercive force,” the researchers wrote. The site, located in Tabasco near the Gulf of Mexico, was hiding in plain sight — not buried deep in jungle, but under a populated area. It had already been named the largest Maya site ever discovered when LIDAR surveys in 2020 showed it stretched 1.4 kilometers. Now, new scans reveal the full ceremonial axis measures 9 kilometers long by 7.5 kilometers wide. At the heart of the site, archaeologists uncovered pigment deposits placed in precise cardinal directions: blue azurite in the north, green malachite in the east, and yellow ochre in the south. These pigments, found in the central cross-shaped pits, represent the earliest known use of Mesoamerican directional color symbolism — a tradition that would become central to later Maya cosmology. “We’ve known that there are specific colors associated with specific directions,” said Inomata. “But we never had actual pigment placed in this way. This is the first case that we’ve found those pigments associated with each specific direction.” Inside the same pits were offerings of seashells and delicately carved jade and greenstone figurines — crocodiles, birds, and a woman giving birth — arranged in the same cross-shaped pattern. The placement appears deliberate, with shells denoting water and aligning with the site’s broader cosmic symbolism. Around the western axis of the site, construction had begun on a canal system, suggesting that water held ritual importance. But the canals were left unfinished, likely due to technical or organizational limitations — a sign that even highly motivated communities hit natural limits. Even so, the achievements of the builders remain staggering. Construction began between 1050 and 700 BCE, during a period when most scholars assumed complex projects required centralized, hierarchical leadership. This site says otherwise. “It exemplifies the capabilities of human organization without prominent inequality,” the team writes. In other words, massive, coordinated public works are possible even in egalitarian societies — driven not by power, but by shared purpose. Inomata hopes the discovery will help change assumptions about how big things get done, both in the past and today. “People have this idea that certain things happened in the past — that there were kings, and kings built the pyramids,” he said. “But once you see the actual data from the past, it was not like that.”

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He Raised £16,000 for Charity by Pulling a Van Nonstop for 24 Hours
For 24 hours straight, Mike Land hauled a 1.5-tonne van around an industrial unit near Chippenham — raising an impressive £16,000 for Wiltshire Air Ambulance in the process. The 55-year-old charity champion completed 76 laps around the 31,935-square-metre facility, walking a total of 30 miles (49 kilometres) while pulling a van that weighed as much as an Asian elephant. His effort came just 2 kilometres shy of a Guinness World Record. “It has been a struggle with fuel, water and getting around the laps. But it's also been amazing with all the support,” Land said after finishing the challenge on Wednesday at 12:00 GMT. The fundraiser lasted from midday Tuesday to midday Wednesday, with Land taking only short breaks for food and toilet stops. He didn't sleep. What he did do was keep going — even as the unseasonably warm temperatures inside the warehouse started to wear him down. "It started off fine. But then we realised how warm this lovely big unit gets in the daytime," he said. “I spent a lot of time topless trying to stay cool and we opened every door and window we could.” By the end, he was exhausted but proud — and shared an emotional hug with family after catching his breath. His partner Sue French, who supported him throughout the campaign, said she was “so proud.” "He's worked so hard at bringing together companies locally to get funding and support,” she said. “The man is constantly out gaining funds for the air ambulance." The £16,000 raised is enough to fund four potentially life-saving air ambulance missions. That kind of impact wasn’t lost on the charity’s corporate fundraiser, Imogen Linham, who helped cheer Land on during his marathon effort. “It's been absolutely epic, we are so proud of Mike,” Linham said. “He's done an absolutely incredible job and it's amazing to feel part of something so special. The money raised goes straight towards the life saving work we do.” Although Land fell just short of setting a world record, he says he’s likely done for now. "The thought of me doing this again at 56 scares the hell out of Sue,” he joked. “I think we'll probably draw a line under it for now.”
Score (97)
Park Walks May Slow Cognitive Decline In Alzheimer's Risk Individuals
A new study suggests that even modest amounts of walking may help slow the progression of Alzheimer’s disease — a potentially game-changing insight for millions of older adults. The research, published November 3 in Nature Medicine, tracked nearly 300 adults between the ages of 50 and 90, all of whom were at risk for Alzheimer’s but showed no cognitive symptoms at the start of the study. The team found that walking between 3,000 and 7,500 steps a day was linked to slower buildup of tau proteins in the brain — a key marker of Alzheimer’s — and delayed cognitive decline. “The very encouraging takeaway is that even a little bit of exercise seems to help,” said Wai-Ying Wendy Yau, the study’s lead author and a neurologist at Harvard Medical School, in an interview with Nature. Participants who walked 3,000 to 5,000 steps per day delayed the onset of cognitive symptoms by an average of three years. Those walking 5,000 to 7,500 steps per day saw an even greater benefit — an average delay of seven years. Researchers used waistband pedometers to track physical activity and conducted annual cognitive tests for an average of 9.3 years. Some participants also underwent periodic PET scans to monitor tau and amyloid-beta, another protein associated with Alzheimer’s. These proteins tend to accumulate in the brains of those at higher risk for the disease, often years before symptoms appear. The study found a clear pattern: people with high amyloid-beta levels who were more active had significantly less buildup of tau proteins over time, and their thinking and daily functioning declined more slowly. “[Exercise is] somehow slowing the spread of this tau protein, which is more strongly associated with people developing symptoms [of Alzheimer’s disease] than amyloid-beta,” Charles Marshall, a dementia researcher at Queen Mary University of London who was not involved in the study, told New Scientist. By contrast, participants with high amyloid levels who were sedentary showed faster tau accumulation and more rapid cognitive decline. While the study does not prove that walking directly prevents Alzheimer’s — it only establishes a correlation — researchers say it offers promising insight into one of medicine’s biggest questions: why some at-risk individuals decline rapidly, while others remain cognitively stable for years. “We need randomized clinical trials to prove cause and effect, but it’s very encouraging that physical activity may help to modify someone’s trajectory,” Yau told The Guardian. For people with low baseline levels of amyloid-beta, the study found little effect from exercise, likely because they were not at significant risk for Alzheimer’s to begin with. Even so, the findings challenge the idea that people need to hit the 10,000-steps-a-day benchmark to benefit from exercise. That’s a number many older adults may struggle to reach — and according to Yau, they might not have to. “Other studies have shown that different types of physical activity, beyond walking, [are] beneficial for brain health,” she told The Washington Post. “An important next step to look at is to clarify what aspects of physical activity—intensity, duration, pattern—[are] the most important in preclinical Alzheimer’s disease.” Jasmeer Chhatwal, the study’s senior author and a neurologist at Massachusetts General Hospital, said the results help explain why some people with early signs of Alzheimer’s pathology don’t decline as quickly as expected. While more research is needed, one message is clear: moving your body — even a little — might help protect your brain.

Score (97)
Friendship Centre Revives Indigenous Wolastoqey Tradition by Building Birchbark Canoes
In a small workshop near the banks of the Wolastoq River in Fredericton, a group of Indigenous builders has spent the last several months piecing together more than just a canoe — they’re rebuilding a connection to their culture. Since May, members of the Under One Sky Friendship Centre have been gathering a few times a week to construct a traditional Wolastoqey birchbark canoe, using techniques that date back generations. On Wednesday morning, their work culminated in the launch of the handbuilt canoe into the Wolastoq, also known as the Saint John River. “I’ve always wanted to build a birchbark canoe,” said Rodney Bear, one of the builders. “The more I can soak up, the more I can teach so that our culture isn’t lost forever.” For Bear and others, this has been about more than craftsmanship. It’s a way to reconnect with history — a time when canoes were essential modes of transport and rivers were the highways of the land. Until now, Bear had never had the opportunity to make one himself. The project was led by artist Shane Perley-Dutcher, a Wolastoqiyik craftsman who’s worked on six canoes, two of which he’s led from start to finish. He doesn’t call himself a master builder, but to the team at Under One Sky, his experience has been key. “All these little elements kind of have to work together in order to make a nice, strong canoe,” he said. That includes birchbark for the canoe’s skin, cedar planks for the ribs, ash wood for the thwarts, and spruce roots for lashing everything together. The group harvested each piece themselves, learning the old ways of gathering and preparing materials directly from the land. To collect the birchbark, Perley-Dutcher invited Gabriel Frey, a Passamaquoddy canoe builder from Maine. Frey scaled nearly 10 metres up a birch tree to peel the bark — without harming the tree. “It was a such a great learning experience for us too,” Perley-Dutcher said. The project was funded by TD Bank and organized through Under One Sky’s Wabanaki Land Based Program, which offers cultural programming for Indigenous community members. For Amber Hawkins, the program’s Wabanaki Wellness Coordinator, the canoe has been deeply personal. “I grew up off-community, I never really had that connection to culture or Indigenous artwork. So this has been extremely transformative,” she said. Candy Paul, who leads the land-based program, said the team initially struggled to see how the raw materials would become a canoe. “But once it started to form, it was like, wow,” she said. “It was pretty amazing.” Charlie Gaffney, who oversees strategic enrollment and community engagement at the Friendship Centre, said the goal was never just about building a canoe — it was about rekindling knowledge that once shaped everyday life. “This was part of our culture, our understanding of how to navigate the rivers and to portage from one place to another,” he said. “Our life depended on these beautiful canoes.” For now, the newly finished canoe will be used by participants of the Wabanaki Land Based Program. But eventually, it will be displayed at Under One Sky’s new Centre, which is set to open in late 2026. Still, for many of the builders, the real takeaway isn’t the canoe itself — it’s the hands-on experience of creating it together. “I’m really looking forward to the end result and seeing the actual canoe touch water,” said Perley-Dutcher. The launch into the Wolastoq River took place at 11 a.m. on Wednesday. But the knowledge passed on throughout this process is what will carry the community forward — one generation at a time.

Score (97)
Lawnmower Man Rewards Alabama Teens for Completing 50 Yard Challenge
Rodney Smith Jr. isn’t just mowing lawns — he’s shaping futures. The Huntsville, Alabama native made headlines in 2023 when he gifted lawn care equipment to two 11-year-olds who completed his 50 Yard Challenge, a nationwide initiative encouraging kids to mow lawns for free for people in need. The recipients, Ja’Torrian Taylor and Tevin Rice of Gadsden, Alabama, had been borrowing an old mower from a neighbor to run their budding business, TJ & JT Mowing Service. “These are good, hard-working kids that deserve some gratitude,” Smith told KMBC. He drove down to meet them in person, handing over a brand-new mower, trimmer, and blower — tools he hoped would help the boys grow their venture. “Giving these boys lawn equipment is teaching them discipline,” Smith said. “If they tell someone they are going to mow a lawn, they need to mow the lawn.” He added, “Remember, this is not the end; it’s just the beginning. This could be the beginning of a successful lawn service.” Smith, now widely known as “The Lawnmower Man,” launched his grassroots movement in 2015 and quickly gained attention the following year when a photo of him helping a 93-year-old woman with her lawn went viral, racking up over a million likes. That viral moment fueled his mission: to offer free lawn care to elderly people, veterans, single mothers, and those unable to care for their own yards — and to inspire the next generation to do the same. He soon created the 50 Yard Challenge, inviting kids and teens across the U.S. to mow 50 lawns, completely free, for those in need. The idea exploded. Today, more than 5,000 young people across 8 countries accepted the challenge. If they all complete it, that would mean nearly 230,000 lawns mowed for free — a massive show of generosity sparked by one man with a mower. The challenge works like this: kids start by sending a photo holding a sign that reads, “I accept the 50 Yard Challenge.” In return, they receive a white Raising Men/Women Lawn Care Service t-shirt, safety glasses, and hearing protection. For every 10 lawns completed, they earn a new colored shirt to mark their progress: • 10 lawns: orange shirt • 20 lawns: green shirt • 30 lawns: blue shirt • 40 lawns: red shirt • 50 lawns: black shirt After completing all 50, they’re rewarded with their own lawnmower, trimmer, and blower — just like Taylor and Rice. Safety is a core part of the program. In videos, Smith emphasizes proper safety practices, like wearing protective gear, clearing debris from yards, and never mowing wet grass. “This challenge is meant to be fun and also to help people,” he said, “but first and foremost, like I said, safety comes first.” Beyond the equipment and shirts, the real impact lies in what the challenge teaches: responsibility, generosity, and pride in hard work. Smith believes it’s a chance for kids to learn how to serve their communities — and maybe even start their own businesses. In Taylor and Rice’s case, it’s already happening. They’ve gone from mowing lawns with a borrowed machine to running a service of their own, powered by grit, kindness, and a little help from a man who knows what it’s like to turn a blade of grass into something bigger. Rodney Smith Jr.'s story is proof that small acts can ripple into something massive. All it takes is a mower, a mission, and the willingness to pass it on. Listen to Rodney's audio sessions with Goodable Plus, right here in the Goodable app.

Score (97)
Life-Size Paddington Bear Wows UK Audiences as Musical Adaptation Opens on West End
Paddington Bear is officially a West End star. Paddington: The Musical made its debut in London on November 1, and the beloved marmalade-loving bear has left audiences speechless — and in some cases, teary-eyed — with how convincingly he’s been brought to life onstage. First-look images and videos of the production quickly went viral. One Instagram user summed up the online reaction simply: “I’m genuinely crying, it’s beautiful.” The musical’s title character is portrayed through an innovative two-actor system. James Hameed provides Paddington’s voice and remotely puppeteers the bear from off-stage, while Arti Shah physically performs the role onstage. A four-person backstage crew supports them to bring Paddington to life, in a performance that’s being praised for its realism and heart. "Thank you, Paddington, for everything that you've given me right now," Shah said in a behind-the-scenes video shared by the production. "Because I never thought that I would be here doing this, ever." The show is playing at London’s Savoy Theatre and has already become one of the city’s most buzzed-about new productions. Social media lit up with reactions during opening weekend. “Gang I’m not kidding Paddington: The Musical is the best new musical I have seen in London in a looong time,” one X (formerly Twitter) user wrote. Another added, “Paddington is Paddington-ing beautifully. I have got something in my eye.” The story follows Paddington’s arrival in London from Peru, where he’s taken in by the Brown family in Windsor Gardens. But it’s not all marmalade sandwiches and polite adventures — a sinister villain soon appears, threatening the bear’s new home and forcing the Browns into a daring rescue mission. According to the synopsis, the family ultimately realizes they need Paddington just as much as he needs them. For producers Sonia Friedman and Eliza Lumley, bringing Paddington to life onstage was the product of years of work. “What we as producers always hoped to achieve was, quite simply, Paddington on stage,” they said in a joint statement. “And thanks to the immensely talented artists, both on and off stage, we believe we’ve realized that.” Tickets for Paddington: The Musical are now available and the show is currently scheduled to run on the West End through October 25, 2026.